Willow Bough — William Morris, framed
William Morris's 1887 textile pattern, taken from the Metropolitan Museum's CC0 archive, framed and ready to hang.
Designed at Merton Abbey, Willow Bough is Morris's meditation on the drooping willow — a pattern where the leaf becomes the whole composition. Morris hated industrial machine printing; this pattern is hand-blocked, slow, built for patience. Every repeat is deliberate negotiation between the organic curl of the willow branch and the grid that holds it. The pattern breathes only because Morris refused to let machines dictate the rhythm.
This is reproduced from the Metropolitan Museum's CC0 archive scan at full resolution, printed on archival fine art paper and framed in solid wood.
THE PRINT
- 15×20 cm / 6×8", 27×35 cm / 11×14", 40×50 cm / 16×20", or 60×80 cm / 24×32" in your choice of 4 solid wood frame colours, portrait orientation
- Archival giclée on 200gsm Enhanced Matte fine art paper, mounted under shatterproof acrylic glazing
- Printed and framed to order by our accredited partner
THE WORK
- Artist: William Morris (1834–1896)
- Year: 1887 (designed at Merton Abbey)
- Collection: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (CC0)
- Source: Met Open Access · high-resolution archival scan
SHIPPING
- Free shipping worldwide
- Printed locally to you — no customs fees, no surprise charges at delivery
- Delivery estimate shown at checkout
Questions? Email us at theplainsight@hotmail.com.